Showing posts with label Hull City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hull City. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Hull City 2 - 2 West Ham United

15/09/2014
20:00
KC Stadium

Hull City vs West Ham United
 Goalscorers: 
1-0 Abel Hernandez 39'
1-1 Enner Valencia 50'
2-1 Mohamed Diamé 64'
2-2 Curtis Davies (OG) 67'

 Analysis 
We wanted entertainment, and that's certainly what we got last night!

A Monday night in Hull isn't usually much to whet the appetite, but last night's game at the KC was a pulsating affair, with West Ham demonstrating the attractive football the fans have been promised, whilst completely sacrificing any defensive resolve built up over the last couple of years!

Positives
There were a lot of positives about last nights performance, with a number of individuals standing out for the Hammers. Stewart Downing was excellent in the middle of the park, the attacking triumvirate of Enner Valencia, Diafra Sakho and Mauro Zárate showed early signs of promise, and Alex Song showed his class coming from the bench.

 The main positive that I want to focus upon is the introduction of a new formation.

For the first time in a long time, West Ham didn't line up in Sam Allardyce's default 4-2-3-1, instead opting for a midfield diamond, as displayed with relative success by England and Liverpool in recent times.

The advantage of playing this system is that it gives the side the numbers in the middle of the park to overrun the opposition, which is exactly what happened last night. The midfield trio of Cheikhou Kouyaté, Mark Noble and Stewart Downing swarmed the centre of the Hull side, dominating Mohamed Diamé & Tom Huddlestone for the Tigers.

The image below shows the Hammers average positions from the game. What you can see, is that Kouyaté (#8), Noble (#16) and Downing (#11) all played very central, relying on the fullbacks Guy Demel (#20) and Aaron Cresswell (#3) to provide the width. This midfield solidity enabled Zárate (#10) to push forward in support of the front two, morphing the side quickly into a classic 4-3-3 formation.


The other advantage of the system was that we had bodies forward in greater numbers and frequency than we often see from this West Ham side.

By starting with two very mobile strikers in Sakho and Valencia, West Ham were able to stretch the Hull defence, and regularly had an outlet high up the park.

The presence of this outlet encouraged us to play in a very different way than we often see when the side operate with a loan target man. Between them, Sakho and Valencia received 49 passes from their team mates, offering regular outlets in the middle of the park and out in the channels.

Compare this to Carlton Cole in our last game against Southampton. During the game, the big striker received just 16 passes, with half of them coming from Adrián in goal, and 3 from James Tomkins at centre half.

The images below show the passes received by Sakho and Valencia last night, and Cole against Southampton. Instantly, you can see that the service received by Sakho and Valencia was of a far greater frequency and quality than that received by Carlton.


Negatives
As I mentioned at the beginning, our defensive resolve was almost non existent last night.

James Tomkins and Aaron Cresswell will take the blame for the goals we conceded last night, but, in truth, it was a poor performance all round from the defence.

Our success in recent years has been built upon the platform of a solid defence. However, this defence has always been shielded by two defensive midfielders - Noble and Matthew Taylor excelled in those roles last season. Last night, we operated with one main defensive midfielder (Mark Noble), whilst Cheikhou Kouyaté pushed further up the field. This, coupled with the added attacking requirements placed on Cresswell and Demel, meant that our centre defence was left exposed and outnumbered regularly.

However, despite the fact that our defensive shape left a little (a lot) to be desired, we actually coped rather well with most of what Hull threw at us. The disappointing thing from a West Ham perspective was that both of the Hull goals came from individual errors.

James Tomkins doesn't officially get a defensive error listed against him for the first goal, but to most viewers, his marking of Abel Hernandez was pretty awful. The leap and finish was rather impressive, but it was the only aerial duel that the Uruguayan won last night (seen in the image below), and Tomkins will feel he should have done better.


The second goal was a far more obvious mistake, and only Aaron Cresswell will know what he was thinking by throwing the ball 25 yards in field to Cheikhou Kouyaté, when the defence was incredible exposed and Mohamed Diamé was lurking.

We shouldn't be discussing throw ins at this level, but, alas, the image below shows Cresswell's throw ins last night. You can see that 10 of the 11 were thrown either short or down the line, and those 10 all went straight to a team mate. The one that bucks the trend was the bizarre decision to throw infield.


Key Player
This is actually quite an easy choice. Whilst we had a number of solid performances, Stewart Downing was by far the best player on the park, for me.

Operating in a unfamiliar central position, the former England winger was exceptional. On the night, Downing created 6 goalscoring opportunities, had four goes on goal himself, and completed a massive 95% of his passes.

The image below shows the chances created by Downing last night. What is immediately evident is that only one came from a cross into the box, with the other 5 offering a demonstration in his range of creative passing.


And it's easy to see why Downing had such an impact by looking at his heat map below. Usually, one of the flanks is littered with darker patches from where the number 11 patrols the wings, rarely venturing elsewhere.

However, last night, Downing was rarely in the same place twice, popping up all over the park, going from right to left to centre with huge variation and regularity. This unpredictability meant no Hull midfielder was able to pick him up consistently, and created huge pockets of space for him to utilise, which he did to great effect.


Conclusion
All in all, this was a good performance that deserved more than just a point.

Hopefully the introduction of Alex Song into the diamond will add an increased level of solidity to our defensive play, and will shore up what has been a rather shaky defensive start to the season.

Either way, this performance certainly provides cause for optimism for West Ham fans.

 General Play 
4-4-2 Formation 4-1-2-1-2
(2) Allan McGregor - Adrián (2)
(21) Ahmed Elmohamady - Guy Demel (-6)
(53) Michael Dawson - James Tomkins (-1)
(23) Curtis Davies - Winston Reid (0)
(-12) Andrew Robertson - Aaron Cresswell (-41)
(21) Jake Livermore - Mark Noble (29)
(11) Tom Huddlestone - Cheikhou Kouyaté (1)
(32) Mohamed Diamé - Stewart Downing (67)
(-18) Stephen Quinn - Mauro Zárate (15)
(-12) Nikica Jelavic - Diafra Sakho (14)
(42) Abel Hernandez - Enner Valencia (47)

(8) Robbie Brady - Alex Song (25)
(6) Gaston Ramirez - Carl Jenkinson (6)
(0) Hatem Ben Arfa - Morgan Amalfitano (9)

Best Performance
(53) Michael Dawson - Stewart Downing (67)

Worst Performance
(-18) Stephen Quinn - Aaron Cresswell (-41)

44% Possession 56%

307 Passes Attempted 461
Tom Huddlestone 40 Most Attempted 65 Mark Noble

78% Passing Accuracy 81%
58% In Opp. Half 65%
Mohamed Diamé 94% Best Accuracy (min. 15 passes) 96% Alex Song

54 Long Balls 44
18% % Long Balls 10%
Michael Dawson 10 Most Long Balls (excl. GK) 12 Aaron Cresswell

Most Frequent Pass Combination
Robertson to Quinn 14 - 18 Downing to Cresswell

 16 Aerial Duels Won 15 
 52% Success 48% 
Curtis Davies 6 Most Won 4 Winston Reid

Andrew Robertson 74 Most Touches 83 Aaron Cresswell

 Offensive Play 
11 Attempts on Goal 16
6 On Target 4
4 Off Target 4
1 Blocked 8
64% From Outside the Box 63%
Abel Hernandez 4 Most Shots 4 Stewart Downing

7 Key Passes 14
Ahmed Elmohamady 2 Most Key Passes 6 Stewart Downing

22 Crosses 32
Andrew Robertson 7 Most Attempted 8 Stewart Downing

6 Successful Crosses 7
27% Success 22%
Ahmed Elmohamady 2 Most Successful 2 Stewart Downing

10 Take Ons Attempted 31
6 Successful Take Ons 16
60% Success 52%
Hatem Ben Arfa 1 Most Successful Take Ons 5 Guy Demel

 Defensive Play 
52 Tackles Attempted 24
20 Successful Tackles 10
38% Success 42%
Mohamed Diamé 6 Most Tackles 4 Mark Noble

54 Clearances 27
Curtis Davies 17 Most Clearances 11 James Tomkins

27 Interceptions 8
Michael Dawson 6 Most Interceptions 2 Alex Song

8 Shot Blocks 1
Michael Dawson 5 Most Shot Blocks 1 Aaron Cresswell

 Discipline 
 12 Fouls 7 
Jake Livermore 3 Most Fouls 2 Cheikhou Kouyaté

3 Yellow Cards 1
Hull City:  Tom Huddlestone,  Andrew Robertson,  Jake Livermore 
West Ham United:  Winston Reid   

0 Red Cards 0
Hull City:     
West Ham United:     

 Head to Heads 
Allan McGregor vs Adrián
2 Squawka Rating 2

2 Goals Conceded 2
3 Saves 4
  
4 Claims 2
4 Successful Claims 2
100% Success 100%

24 Total Distribution 32
12 Accurate 18
50% Success 56%

7 Goal Kicks 6
1 Accurate 4
14% Success 67%
  
3 Throw Outs 6
3 Accurate 6
100% Success 100%

0 Kick from Hand 1
0 Accurate 0
0% Success 0%
  
14 Other 19
8 Accurate 8
57% Success 42%

0 Errors Leading to Shot 0
0 Errors Leading to Goal 0

Nikica Jelavic 4 Most Passed To 5 James Tomkins
Curtis Davies 6 Most Passes From 6 James Tomkins

Michael Dawson vs James Tomkins
53 Squawka Rating -1

7 Aerial Duels 5
4 Duels Won 3
57% Success 60%
  
1 Tackles Attempted 3
1 Tackles Completed 1
100% Success 33%
  
14 Clearances 11
6 Interceptions 0
5 Blocks 0
0 6yrd Blocks 0
  
0 Errors Leading to Shot 0
0 Errors Leading to Goal 0
  
26 Passes Attempted 53
19 Successful 44
73% Success 83%
  
1 Crosses Attempted 0
1 Successful 0
100% Success 0%
  
0 Key Passes 0
  
0 Attempts on Goal 2
0 On Target 0
0 Goals 0
  
Andrew Robertson 6 Most Passed To 10 Mark Noble
Ahmed Elmohamady 7 Most Passes From 13 Guy Demel

Mohamed Diamé vs Stewart Downing
32 Squawka Rating 67

17 Passes Attempted 60
16 Successful 57
94% Success 95%
  
0 Key Passes 6
0 Assists 1
  
2 Attempts on Goal 2
1 On Target 1
1 Goals 0
  
0 Take Ons Attempted 0
0 Take Ons Successful 0
0% Success 0%
  
1 Crosses Attempted 8
0 Successful 2
0% Success 25%
  
9 Tackles Attempted 1
5 Tackles Completed 0
56% Success 0%
  
0 Clearances 1
2 Interceptions 0
1 Blocks 0
0 6yrd Blocks 0
  
0 Errors Leading to Shot 0
0 Errors Leading to Goal 0
  
Amhed Elmohamady 3 Most Passed To 18 Aaron Cresswell
Stephen Quinn 4 Most Passes From 18 Aaron Cresswell

Abel Hernandez vs Enner Valencia
42 Squawka Rating 47

4 Attempts on Goal 3
3 On Target 3
1 Goals 1
  
28 Touches 35
5 in Penalty Area 9
18% % Penalty Area 26%

0 Key Passes 1
0 Assists 0
  
15 Passes Attempted 15
12 Successful 12
80% Success 80%
  
2 Take Ons 9
0 Successful Take Ons 3
0% Success 33%
  
3 Aerial Duels 5
1 Duels Won 2
33% Success 40%
  
Nikica Jelavic 3 Most Passed To 3 Diafra Sakho
Ahmed Elmohamady 3 Most Passes From 6 Stewart Downing

Monday, 15 September 2014

Hull City vs West Ham United

Monday 15th September 2014
20:00
KC Stadium

Hull City vs West Ham United

Analysis
The history books will say that the last time West Ham played Hull City it was a 2-1 victory for the Hammers against 10 men. Of course, we all know that it was far more than that. That day in March was the day the tide turned on Sam Allardyce, and the frustrations of the fans became apparent to the masses.

Since then, the manager has been tasked with bringing a new brand of play to West Ham, and has brought in some exciting players to allow him to do so.

How we perform tonight in Yorkshire will go some way in determining how successful the summer has been for Allardyce.

Key Player
It's quite difficult to pick out a key player for Hull at the moment, given their late recruitment drive on deadline day, when they added our very own Mohamed Diamé, Newcastle's Hatem Ben Arfa, and new club record signing Abel Hernandez to their ranks. But it is not one of those late arrivals that I think West Ham need to keep the closest eye upon.

Despite the recent trend for the 3-5-2 formation drawing criticism from pundits and the press, Steve Bruce's Hull have been making the system work for a while now.

Key to playing that system effectively is the presence of high energy, hard working wingbacks. And on the right hand side, Ahmed Elmohamady is certainly that.

In the Premier League last season, the Egyptian was an ever present for Hull, starting 38 games out of 38, and only being removed from the action 5 times. And during that time on the field, Elmohamady proved himself to be exactly what a wingback needs to be; a threat in attack, and reliable in defence.

In his 38 appearance last season, the the wingback made just one defensive error. He made 80 clearances, and a massive 70 interceptions. He also won 58% of his 93 attempted tackles, and 74 of his 147 aerial duels. In short, his defensive performances were excellent.

An example of Elmohamady's defensive resolve could be the 4-0 away victory against Cardiff City back in February. The Egyptian won 100% of his 4 attempted tackles, made 1 interception, 3 clearances, and gave away no fouls. The images below show his tackles and heat map from that game.


In attack, the man signed from Sunderland has proven that he is a more than capable Premier League winger, completing 42 of his 73 take ons last season and creating 42 goalscoring opportunities.

In the 6-0 dismantling of Fulham last December, Elmohamady displayed his attacking prowess. During that game, he attempted 2 take ons, put 11 crosses into the box - creating one goalscoring chance - and bagged himself a goal.

The image below shows the crosses that the wingback put in. What you'll notice, is that he often crosses from deeper positions. So, rather than bombing to the touchline, he is able to conserve his energies by putting dangerous crosses in from deep.


How do you stop Hull?
Once again, it's a bit difficult to say. With Hull's new signings coming into the fray, and manager Steve Bruce's willingness to experiment with tactics, Hull are quite an unpredictable package at the moment.

At home, it is likely that they will continue with their 3-5-2 formation, with the aforementioned Elmohamady down the right, and one of Andrew Robertson (who is undergoing a late fitness test) or Liam Rosenior likely to line up on the opposite flank.

The criticism that the 3-5-2 has attracted recently has been down to the apparent ease with which oppositions can target you down the flanks. However, if we look at the areas in which Aston Villa exposed the formation in their recent game, we can see a different approach.

Paul Lambert's men clearly decided to leave their fullbacks to deal with the Hull wingbacks, and instead overloaded the middle of the park, stopping Tom Huddlestone and Jake Livermore from playing their way into the game.

If you look at the average positions map below, you can see that Villa tucked their widemen inside, making almost a 5 man centre midfield. This allowed them to dominate the trio in the middle of the park for Hull, whilst also causing havoc for the three centre backs.


But what Villa did very well, was win the ball in the middle of the park, and then break down the flanks. During that game the wide pairing of Kieron Richardson and Charles N'Zogbia had to work hard to support the midfield three, and then offer a wide outlet once the ball was won.

This led to just 23% of their attacks coming through the central channel.


Weaknesses
Other than the vulnerabilities that I've already mentioned above, Hull don't have a huge amount of obvious weaknesses.

Their main flaw is probably that, for a team that regularly field two strikers, they don't really get enough goals. However, with the additions of Hernandez, Ben Arfa and Tom Ince, it seems that this problem may not be about for the long haul.

Other than that, their biggest problem is that they allow the opposition to create chances regularly. So far this season, keeper Allan McGregor has already conceded 3 goals, and made an average of 3 saves per game, and, in truth, those figures would be a whole lot worse had they not been let off by poor finishing.

The chart below shows the chances that Hull have conceded in the Premier League this season. Against both QPR and Stoke City, the Tigers conceded 19 shots on their goal, resulting in just 6 and 2 shots on target, and one goal. Villa were the most ruthless with their finishing, netting with 2 of their 4 shots on target, but they also missed the target 7 times.


If West Ham turn up with our shooting boots on, and keep an eye on those pesky wingbacks, Hull City should be a side that we dispatch.

Either way, let's hope there's no booing at the end of this one.

 Head to Head 
26% Head to Head Win % 42%
11 Won 18
14 Drawn 14
18 Lost 11
49 Goals Scored 65
65 Goals Conceded 49

 Recent Form (excl. Friendlies) 
W W L D W L Last 6 W L L W L L
7 Goals Scored 7
6 Goals Conceded 8
  
W L L W D W Home/Away Form L W L L L W
6 Goals Scored 7
8 Goals Conceded 11
  
 Form Player (excl. GK) 
 (Last 6 League) 
Tom Huddlestone - Mark Noble
5 Appearances 6
431 Minutes Played 540
  
142 Sum Squawka Performance Score 183
28 Average Squawka Performance Rating 31
  
241 Passes Attempted 370
195 Completed 320
81% Success Rate 86%
  
5 Chances Created 5
0 Assists 0
  
3 Attempts on Goal 2
3 On Target 1
0 Goals 1

4 Take Ons Attempted 5
3 Successful Take Ons 3
75% Success Rate 60%
  
13 Tackles Made 30
8 Successful Tackles 23
62% Success Rate 77%
  
6 Interceptions 9
13 Clearances 11
2 Blocks 3
4 Defensive Actions Per Game 4
  
6 Aerial Duels 6
3 Won 4
50% Success Rate 67%

1 Defensive Errors 0
0 Leading to a Goal 0
  
 Last Meeting 
26 March 2014
1-0 Mark Noble 26'
1-1 Nikica Jelavic 48'
2-1 James Chester OG 54'
  
3-5-2 Starting Formation 4-2-3-1

(S/O 23') Allan McGregor - Adrián
Curtis Davies - Guy Demel
(25') Alex Bruce - James Collins (9')
James Chester - James Tomkins
Ahmed Elmohamady - George McCartney
Jake Livermore - Mark Noble
David Meyler - Matthew Taylor
Tom Huddlestone - Stewart Downing
(59') Maynor Figueroa - Kevin Nolan
Shane Long - Mohamed Diamé (69')
(82') Nikica Jelavic - Andy Carroll

 Subs 
(25') Steve Harper - Jussi Jääskeläinen
(59') Liam Rosenior - Roger Johnson (9')
Stephen Quinne - Pablo Armero
Robert Koren - Antonio Nocerino
Sone Aluko - Joe Cole (69')
Matty Fryatt - Ricardo Vâz Te
(82') Yannick Sagbo - Carlton Cole

 Absentees 
 Injured/Doubtful 
Hull City: Andrew Robertson, Robert Snodgrass
West Ham United: James Collins, Carl Jenkinson, Joey O'Brien, Kevin Nolan, Matt Jarvis, Andy Carroll

 Suspensions 
Hull City: 
West Ham United: 

  Opposition Last Time Out (League)
vs Aston Villa
 Goals Scored: 1
 Goals Conceded: 2
 Starting Formation: 3-5-2

  Allan McGregor

  Paul McShane  Michael Dawson  Curtis Davies (46')

  Ahmed Elmohamady                                                    Andrew Robertson

Jake Livermore  Tom Huddlestone (71')  Stephen Quinn 

  Nikica Jelavic  Tom Ince (57')

 subs:
Steve Harper
  Alex Bruce
  Liam Rosenior (46')
  David Meyler
  Robbie Brady (57')
  Sone Aluko (71')
  Yannick Sagbo
  
 Best Player: Jake Livermore(SR: 41)
 Worst Player: Curtis Davies(SR: -23)
  
 Top 5's (Min 2 Apps) 
 Goals Scored 
Nikica Jelavic 2 - 1 Mauro Zárate
James Chester 1 - 1 Carlton Cole
                         - 1 Stewart Downing
                         - 1 Mark Noble
  -  

 Assists 
Stephen Quinn 2 - 1 Mauro Zárate
                         - 1 Cheikhou Kouyaté
  -  
  -  
  -  

 Passing Accuracy 
Tom Ince 93% - 93% Mauro Zárate
James Chester 92% - 87% Mark Noble
Paul McShane 89% - 85% Joey O'Brien
Jake Livermore 84% - 85% Winston Reid
Ahmed Elmohamady 84% - 82% Cheikhou Kouyaté

 Chances Created per game 
Nikica Jelavic 1 - 2 Stewart Downing
Jake Livermore 1 - 1 Aaron Cresswell
Stephen Quinne 0.67 - 1 Ricardo Vâz Te
Tom Ince 0.67 - 1 Joey O'Brien
James Chester 0.5 - 1 Mark Noble

 Successful Dribbles per game 
Ahmed Elmohamady 1.33 - 2 Mauro Zárate
Tom Huddlestone 1 - 1 Mark Noble
Andrew Robertson 0.67 - 1 Cheikhou Kouyaté
Stephen Quinn 0.67 - 0.67 Mohamed Diamé*
Curtis Davies 0.33 - 0.33 Stewart Downing

 Tackles Won per game 
Andrew Robertson 2.67 - 4.33 Cheikhou Kouyaté
Ahmed Elmohamady 2 - 3.67 Mark Noble
Jake Livermore 1.67 - 2 Mauro Zárate
Tom Huddlestone 1.67 - 1.67 Mohamed Diamé
Paul McShane 1.33 - 1.67 Joey O'Brien

 Aerial Duels Won per game 
Paul McShane 3.33 - 3.5 James Tomkins
Curtis Davies 3.33 - 3.33 Cheikhou Kouyaté
Nikica Jelavic 2.67 - 3.33 Winston Reid
James Chester 1.5 - 2 Joey O'Brien
Andrew Robertson 1 - 1.67 Carlton Cole

 Manager 
Steve Bruce - Sam Allardyce
 Current Club 
42.4% Win % 39.7%
45 Won 56
20 Drawn 32
41 Lost 53
  
 League Titles 0
 Cup Wins 0
  
08/06/2012 Appointed 01/06/2011
2y 98d Time in Charge 3y 106d
  
 Managerial Career 
37.4% Win % 39.7%
258 Won 350
170 Drawn 231
261 Lost 300

8 Sides Managed 7
0 League Titles 2
0 Cup Wins 0
  
Sheffield United First Managerial Role Preston North End
02/07/1998 Start Date 30/09/1992
16y 75d Experience 21y 349d